Sacking in war means looting and destroying.
They were hastened by the Roman sacking of Jerusalem, and the persecution of Jews in Spain.
Ancient Rome was sacked four times (by the Senone Gauls in 387 BC, the Visigoths in 410 AD, the Vandals in 455 Ad and the Ostrogoths in 546 AD). Some of the times Rome was besieged, she was also sacked. When sieges of Rome were abandoned, this was due to the protection given by the city walls and good organisation of the defence of the city by its citizens or the arrival of Roman armies from elsewhere.
The Italians didn't take control of Rome. Rome took control of the Italians by progressively conquering them and taking them on as allies. They also did the same with the Greek cities around the coast of the Italian peninsula, and the Gauls in northern Italy.
Yes. A primarily French crusading army set out on the Fourth Crusade and in 1203 attacked Constantinople, ultimately sacking it with the help of Venetian naval forces.
A sack is when the quarterback is tackled behind the line of scrimmage before he can throw a forward pass/lateral. Tackling the quarterback behind the lime of scrimmage on a running play is not considered a sack.
Sacking of Lawrence happened on 1856-05-21.
After the sacking of Mark Hughes, Roberto Mancini was appointed manager of Manchester City Football Club on December 19th 2009.
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Roman siege on the Jerusalem ended with the sacking of the city. This was an infamous war.
The Iliad ended with the death of Hector, it never described the sacking of Troy yet.
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deacon Jones
John Brown
sacking
They block the defensive line from sacking the quarterback
Sackless, sacked, sacking.
A sackage is an act of sacking, or of pillaging or looting.